Patrick Bradley, popularly known as the Gay Foodie has penned an emotional letter to his parent for their refusal to attend his wedding.
Patrickâs parents chose never seeing their son again over attending a wedding because of their biblical beliefs.
Almost two and a half years since that decision was made, Patrick, who is a food columnist, has now revealed he is ready to reply to them and has penned an emotional letter addressing the hurt they caused him.
Patrick, who is the founder of TheGayFoodie.com, explains how he met his mother in New Jersey for Motherâs Day, where he told her that his partner, Michaelâs extended family were âso excitedâ to meet her.
Thatâs when his mother outright told him that his parents would not be attending the wedding, and shared her fear of an angel appearing to him saying: âStop praying for Patrick! Heâs already in hellâ
The blogger bravely responded by telling her that if they did not attend, they would not see him again after the wedding, âno holidays, no birthdays, no hospitals, no funerals.â
Read Patrick's open letter in full to his parents below:
Dear Mom and Dad,
Itâs been 890 days since the day that you both decided not to partake in my wedding. I donât know why itâs taken me this long to say anything about it. Perhaps Iâve been afraid of what the family will think, what the family might say. Or perhaps Iâve been afraid of losing even more of my wonderful, beautiful family, whom I think about day and night.
But the time is now because Iâve finally grown too tired of the 890 days and nights of being haunted by your presenceâby your lack of presence, to be more precise. Iâm tired of night after night of dreaming of you. And tonight, I had the most unpleasant of dreamsâone that jolted me from my sleep and disallowed me to return to it. So at 6:22 a.m., after little more than three hours of sleep, Iâm writing this letter to youâknowing that it is taking from my opportunity of getting a full nightâs rest before work; but Iâd rather work on little sleep than on little dignity.
As not to keep anyone in the family excluded (any longer), Iâm sending this letter to everyone involved. I want everyone to know what had happened on my last visit to you, before my beautiful, wonderful wedding. Iâm not writing this letter in an act of vengeance (even though it feels like it is), but rather, Iâm doing it because Iâm tired of walking on eggshells around my siblings, godchildren, nephews and nieces. Iâm tired of having to be âcivilâ with both of you, âfor the sake of the family.â Iâm also tired of the unwanted holiday and birthday gifts, and Iâm tired of you having the audacity to speak to my husband (and myself) as if nothing has happened. Have you no shame?
I think itâs time that I told my side of the story to the family, as Iâm sure you have already told yours. I want everything to be out in the open, so that I can feel like I have all of my dignity with me when I will undoubtedly see you at family gatheringsâgatherings which I now would rather avoid if it means that either of you will be present; I have other ways of seeing my family.
On May 13, 2013, I made the trip out to New Jerseyâthe day after Motherâs Dayâto take you out for lunch because I had to work the previous day. You picked me up at the train station and we stopped at A & P to pick up a birthday card for one of the boys. On the way there, I told you about how Michaelâs extended family, whoâd be traveling from Georgia, Colorado and beyondâin part to meet you!âwere so excited about meeting you. You simply replied that you both would not be going to the wedding. I tried my best to retain composure, thinking that Iâd be able to change your mind before the big day.
By the time we left A & P, you started citing the bible, while unsuspecting shoppers were bustling about us, running their afternoon errands. And by the time we got back to the car, youâd mentioned your fear of an angel appearing to you, saying, âStop praying for Patrick! Heâs already in hell!â I knew then that it was time to go to my last resort and give an ultimatum which I never expected would be fulfilled.
I explained to you, simply and calmly, that if you (both) did not attend my wedding, you would not see me again after the wedding: no holidays, no birthdays, no hospitals, no funerals. What I heard next put me into a state of mild shock. You followed up, quickly and readily, with, âWe know that! I talked to your dad last night and we already accept it! We said that we give you back to God!â I recall other things being said, which Iâll omit here. As I sat in shockâshock that you would rather never see me again than attend my weddingâyou simply moved onto your next subject: âWell, I guess you donât want to go to lunch anymore.â As I opened the car door to walk back to the train station, you offered, âLet me drive you back to the train. Let it be the one last thing that I do for you.â If there was any doubt in my mind that Iâd misunderstood what youâd said to me previously, you had clarified your intentions then and there.
Mom and Dad: By not attending my wedding, you rejected me, and you rejected my husband, who is my own immediate family. I, in turn, reject anyone that rejects my familyâout of dignity and respect for it. But I am offering resolution.
I will forgive you both for what you have done, if you, in front of the entire family (from youngest to eldest) admit that what you both did was wrong; admit that you both should have been at the wedding. Because I do think that what you both have done is shameful. Youâve torn a family apart. But what breaks my heart most is what this has done to the youngest in the familyâthe ones who were too young to know, or too young to understand what was going on. The ones whose only conclusion was perhaps âPatrick must be badâ or âHe must have done something wrong because Grandma didnât go to his wedding.â That is where I think you both should bear the shame, not me.
I want everyone to know everything. And maybe tonight, Iâll finally be able to sleep the whole night through.
With Best Intentions,
Patrick